CoastWatch Has Key Roles in Marine Debris Action Plan

Cleaning up debris on the rocky shore.\Photo by Sara Schreiber.

CoastWatchers have been actively cleaning beaches of marine debris since the program was founded more than 20 years ago, and CoastWatch has had an organized marine debris project for the past six. In the wake of the 2011 Japanese tsunami, Oregon Shores (through CoastWatch) joined with four partners—Surfrider, SOLVE, Oregon Sea Grant and Washed Ashore—to form the Oregon Marine Debris Team. We’ve worked together on cleanups and public awareness efforts, and CoastWatch has taken the lead in conducting a formal marine debris survey.

Now these efforts have been folded into a first-ever statewide marine debris plan. Over the past year and a half CoastWatch collaborated with some 30 local, state, and federal agencies and fellow conservation groups, under the auspices of the Marine Debris Program of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), to develop a comprehensive Oregon Marine Debris Action Plan, which has now been adopted.

The plan addresses strategies for cleaning up debris both on the shore and in the ocean; studying its contents and distribution to understand the problem better; educating the public; and eliminating waste prone to becoming marine debris at its source.

CoastWatch and our partners in the Oregon Marine Debris Team have many roles to play in carrying the plan forward. As has been the case all along, non-profit conservation groups will be in the forefront of monitoring, cleanup, and education. A key goal of the planning process has been to better mesh these efforts with resource provided by government bodies and universities.

CoastWatch will continue to take the lead role in monitoring for marine debris and conducting formal citizen science surveys using NOAA’s protocol. CoastWatch will work with OMDT partners on larger cleanup initiatives, while continuing to organize urgent, rapid-response cleanups when especially problematic debris deposits are observed.

Oregon Shores and CoastWatch will also engage students in service-learning projects to track and remove debris while studying its sources; participate in public education campaigns to reduce the use of materials, especially single-use plastics (think, straws) that tend to wind up in the ocean; develop marine debris exhibits; work with other groups to develop an Oregon Marine Debris Month and Rise above Plastics Day; and work in other ways to disseminate information about marine debris and work toward reducing it.

For more on CoastWatch’s current marine debris monitoring work, go here.